Hyperonyms
(has_hyperonym)
|
11564734-n:
family of mostly woody dicotyledonous flowering plants with flowers often unisexual and often borne in catkins
|
Holonyms
(has_holo_member)
|
12260021-n:
an order of dicotyledonous trees of the subclass Hamamelidae
|
Meronyms
(has_mero_member)
|
12260593-n:
beeches
|
Meronyms
(has_mero_member)
|
12262327-n:
chestnuts; chinkapins
|
Meronyms
(has_mero_member)
|
12264254-n:
evergreen trees and shrubs of warm regions valued for their foliage; southeastern United States and eastern Australia and northern New Zealand
|
Meronyms
(has_mero_member)
|
12264621-n:
two species: golden chinkapins
|
Meronyms
(has_mero_member)
|
12265266-n:
tanbark oaks
|
Meronyms
(has_mero_member)
|
12265900-n:
beeches of temperate southern hemisphere except Africa: southern beech
|
Meronyms
(has_mero_member)
|
12268096-n:
oaks
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
00073897-r:
for the most part
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
01542865-a:
having male and female reproductive organs in the same plant or animal
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
12260593-n:
beeches
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
12260799-n:
any of several large deciduous trees with rounded spreading crowns and smooth grey bark and small sweet edible triangular nuts enclosed in burs; north temperate regions
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
12262327-n:
chestnuts; chinkapins
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
12262553-n:
any of several attractive deciduous trees yellow-brown in autumn; yield a hard wood and edible nuts in a prickly bur
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
12264254-n:
evergreen trees and shrubs of warm regions valued for their foliage; southeastern United States and eastern Australia and northern New Zealand
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
12264621-n:
two species: golden chinkapins
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
12265266-n:
tanbark oaks
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
12265900-n:
beeches of temperate southern hemisphere except Africa: southern beech
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
12268096-n:
oaks
|
Glosses
(gloss)
|
13112664-n:
a low woody perennial plant usually having several major stems
|
Glosses
(rgloss)
|
12313005-n:
a group of chiefly woody plants considered among the most primitive of angiosperms; perianth poorly developed or lacking; flowers often unisexual and often in catkins and often wind pollinated; contains 23 families including the Betulaceae and Fagaceae (includes the Amentiferae); sometimes classified as a superorder
|